Video: Report Suggests Dividing Mississippi River and Great Lakes to Stop Asian Carp Invasion

   01.31.12

Video: Report Suggests Dividing Mississippi River and Great Lakes to Stop Asian Carp Invasion

A new report says it is possible to restore the natural divide between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River basins to stop the spread of the invasive Asian carp species into the Great Lakes.

According to the Great Lakes Commission (GLC) website, the findings of the report come after the GLC and the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative and six organizations that helped fund the initiative began the project in July of 2010. Their aim was to identify engineering options for Chicago’s waterway system that will prevent interbasin movement of aquatic invasive species, including Asian carp.

From the GLC press release, “Physically separating the Great Lakes and Mississippi River watersheds is the best long-term solution for preventing the movement of Asian carp and other aquatic invasive species, and our report demonstrates that it can be done,” said Tim Eder, executive director of the Great Lakes Commission.

There are groups and individuals opposed to the plan, particularly those worried about the available waterways for cargo ships and those out on the water for recreation. The Army Corps of Engineers has an electric barrier for Asian carp in place in the shipping canal, but Eder calls their solution temporary since carp DNA has been found past the electric barrier. The Army Corps of Engineers, who is conducting the Great Lakes and Mississippi River Interbasin Study, has not yet commented on the proposal set by GLC until it has time to review the report.

Video: The Great Lakes Commission on Restoring the Natural Divide

Original press release issued by the Associated Press on January 31st, 2012:

Groups representing states and cities in the Great Lakes region on Tuesday proposed spending up to $9.5 billion on a massive engineering project to separate the lakes from the Mississippi River watershed in the Chicago area, describing it as the only sure way to protect both aquatic systems from invasions by destructive species such as Asian carp.

The organizations issued a report suggesting three alternatives for severing an artificial link between the two drainage basins that was constructed more than a century ago. Scientists say it has already provided a pathway for exotic species and is the likeliest route through which menacing carp could reach the lakes, where they could destabilize food webs and threaten a valuable fishing industry.

“We simply can’t afford to risk that,” said Tim Eder, executive director of the Great Lakes Commission, which sponsored the study with the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative. “The Great Lakes have suffered immensely because of invasive species. We have to put a stop to this.”

The report’s release is sure to ramp up pressure on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which is conducting its own study of how to close off 18 potential pathways between the two systems, including the Chicago waterways. The corps plans to release its findings in late 2015, a timetable it says is necessary because of the job’s complexity and regulatory requirements. A pending federal lawsuit by five states – Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Ohio and Pennsylvania – demands quicker action.

The DIDSON (Dual frequency Identification SONAR) is an acoustic camera that can be used in turbid water to observe fish behavior and location in real time with minimal disturbance. Observations of fish behavior at the barrier will provide valuable information about the efficacy of the barrier for most fish sizes. Over the long term, this will be important for ongoing monitoring and risk reduction efforts at the barrier.

“This study shows that hydrological separation is both technically and economically feasible,” said Rep. Dave Camp, a Michigan Republican.

A spokeswoman said the corps would not comment until it could review the report.

The project that linked the two drainage basins began in the 1890s when engineers reversed the flow of the Chicago River to flush sewage away from the city and into a newly built, 28-mile-long canal that created a connection between Lake Michigan and the Illinois River, a tributary of the Mississippi. It is now a network of rivers, locks and canals.

In their report, the two groups call for placing barriers at key points to cut off the flow of water between the two drainage basins by 2029.

One alternative would put barriers in five locations near Lake Michigan. Another would erect a single barrier in the ship canal before it branches off into connecting waterways. A third plan would use four barriers.

The report does not express a preference but says the four-barrier plan would cost less than the others – between $3.26 billion and $4.27 billion. That plan, the report says, would cause less disruption of waterborne commerce and fewer problems with flood and stormwater control, all of which opponents contend would result from dividing the two systems. It also comes closest to restoring the natural divide between the watersheds, said David Ullrich, executive director of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative.

The report doesn’t make a detailed proposal for covering the costs but says the four-barrier plan could be done if the average household in the Great Lakes basin paid about $1 a month through 2059.

The five-barrier and single-barrier plans’ price tags could reach about $9.5 billion.

Despite the high cost, the report’s sponsors said the project would save money in the long run by shielding both systems from species invasions. Zebra and quagga mussels and sea lamprey already have exacted a heavy toll on the Great Lakes economy, and the region’s leaders fear the Asian carp could make things much worse.

“Yes, it’s expensive. But the cost of doing nothing is greater,” Ullrich said.

Asian carp escaped from Southern fish farms and sewage treatment plants decades ago and migrated up the Mississippi and its tributaries, gobbling up plankton that is essential for other nourishing other fish.

The study, commissioned by the two groups and developed by a private engineering firm, will make the idea of separation easier for people in the region to grasp, said Joel Brammeier, president of the Alliance for the Great Lakes, a Chicago-based environmental group.

“It’s a natural, practical, on-the-ground map of how to get it done,” Brammeier said.

Mark Biel, chairman of an Illinois business coalition called UnLock Our Jobs that opposes separating the watersheds, said the Great Lakes groups’ proposals would take many years to carry out and would devastate cargo shipping and pleasure boating in the Chicago area while doing nothing to prevent species invasions elsewhere.

“Calling this a solution is ludicrous,” Biel said.

But the report’s authors said their plan envisions upgrades to docks and other infrastructure that, in the long run, would boost water commerce while improving water quality and flood protection. The barriers themselves would make up just 3 percent of the total cost.

The Army Corps of Engineers contends an electric barrier in the shipping canal is preventing Asian carp and other fish from swimming upstream toward Lake Michigan, although carp DNA has been found beyond the device. Eder said the barrier is a good temporary measure, but not a permanent solution.

“It’s kind of like the old Clint Eastwood adage, ‘How lucky do you feel?'” he said. “We can take chances that the electric barrier and other measures will work, but I don’t think we should.”

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